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DECISION
PERALTA , J : p
In this petition for review under Rule 45 of the Rules of Court, the Republic of the
Philippines, through the Of ce of the Solicitor General, assails the March 30, 2006
Decision 1 and the November 20, 2006 Resolution, 2 both of the Court of Appeals, in CA-
G.R. CV No. 80500. The assailed decision reversed and set aside the July 10, 2003
judgment 3 of the Regional Trial Court of Las Piñas City, Branch 199 in LRC Case No. 02-
0036, one for original registration of title, whereas the assailed Resolution denied
reconsideration. TcIaHC
At the close of Jose na's testimony, respondents formally offered their exhibits
without the oppositor placing any objection thereto. 2 2 After weighing the evidence, the
trial court, on July 10, 2003, rendered its Decision denying the application for
registration. It found that respondents were unable to establish with certainty the
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identity of the lots applied for registration, because of failure to submit to the court the
original tracing cloth plan as mandated by Presidential Decree (P.D.) No. 1529. It
likewise noted that the fact of adverse, continuous, open, public and peaceful
possession in the concept of owner has not been proved by the evidence as Zenaida's
and Jose na's respective testimonies did not establish the nature of the possession of
respondents' predecessors. 2 3 The dispositive portion of the Decision reads:
WHEREFORE, for failure of the applicants to comply with the requirements of
Presidential Decree No. 1529, the Application for Original Registration of Title is
hereby DENIED.
ORDERED. 2 4
Aggrieved, respondents appealed to the Court of Appeals which, on March 30, 2006,
issued the assailed Decision reversing the trial court as follows:
WHEREFORE, premises considered, the assailed decision is hereby REVERSED
and SET ASIDE. Accordingly, the instant appeal is hereby GRANTED.
SO ORDERED. 2 5
Petitioner's motion for reconsideration was denied. 2 6 Hence, it led the instant
petition which attributes error to the Court of Appeals in reversing the trial court's July
10, 2003 decision.
Petitioner principally posits that under Section 17 of P.D. No. 1529, the
submission in court of the original tracing cloth plan of the property sought to be
registered is a mandatory requirement in registration proceedings in order to establish
the exact identity of the property. While respondents admitted that the original tracing
cloth plan of Lot Nos. 4 and 5 in this case was in the custody of the LRA as a
consequence of their rst attempt to have the property registered, petitioner, invoking
Del Rosario v. Republic of the Philippines , 2 7 believes that respondents, on that score
alone, are not relieved of their procedural obligation to adduce in evidence the original
copy of the plan, because they could have easily retrieved it from the LRA and
presented it in court. 2 8
Furthermore, petitioner suggests that the blueprint of the subdivision plan
submitted by respondents cannot approximate substantial compliance with the
requirement of Section 17 of P.D. No. 1529. Again, relying on the aforementioned Del
Rosario case, petitioner observes that the blueprint in this case, allegedly illegible and
unreadable, does not even bear the certi cation of the Lands Management Bureau. 2 9
Lastly, petitioner attacks respondents' claim of prior possession. It notes that there is
no clear and convincing evidence that respondents and their predecessors-in-interest
have been in open, continuous, adverse, public and exclusive possession of Lot Nos. 4
and 5 for 30 years. 3 0
Commenting on the petition, respondents observe that petitioner's arguments
are mere reiterative theses on the issues that have already been addressed by the Court
of Appeals in the assailed Decision and Resolution, and that there are no new matters
raised which have not yet been previously passed upon. Accordingly, they prayed that
the petition be denied. 3 1
We find the petition to be unmeritorious.
Section 17 of P.D. No. 1529, otherwise known as The Property Registration
Decree of 1978, materially provides: DHITCc
Yet if the reason for requiring an applicant to adduce in evidence the original
tracing cloth plan is merely to provide a convenient and necessary means to afford
certainty as to the exact identity of the property applied for registration and to ensure
that the same does not overlap with the boundaries of the adjoining lots, there stands
to be no reason why a registration application must be denied for failure to present the
original tracing cloth plan, especially where it is accompanied by pieces of evidence —
such as a duly executed blueprint of the survey plan and a duly executed technical
description of the property — which may likewise substantially and with as much
certainty prove the limits and extent of the property sought to be registered.
Thus, sound is the doctrinal precept laid down in Republic of the Philippines v.
Court of Appeals, 3 4 and in the later cases of Spouses Recto v. Republic of the
Philippines 3 5 and Republic of the Philippines v. Hubilla , 3 6 that while the best evidence
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to identify a piece of land for registration purposes is the original tracing cloth plan
issued by the Bureau of Lands (now the Lands Management Services of the
Department of Environment and Natural Resources [DENR]), blueprint copies and other
evidence could also provide suf cient identi cation. Pertinently, the Court in Hubilla,
citing Recto, pronounced:
While the petitioner correctly asserts that the submission in evidence of the
original tracing cloth plan, duly approved by the Bureau of Lands, is a mandatory
requirement, this Court has recognized instances of substantial compliance with
this rule. In previous cases, this Court ruled that blueprint copies of the original
tracing cloth plan from the Bureau of Lands and other evidence could also
provide suf cient identi cation to identify a piece of land for registration
purposes. . . . 3 7
In the case at bar, we nd that the submission of the blueprint of Plan Ccs-
007601-000040-D, together with the technical description of the property, operates as
substantial compliance with the legal requirement of ascertaining the identity of Lot
Nos. 4 and 5 applied for registration. The blueprint, which is shown to have been duly
executed by Geodetic Engineer Rolando Roxas (Roxas), attached to the application and
subsequently identi ed, marked, and offered in evidence, shows that it proceeded
of cially from the Lands Management Services and, in fact, bears the approval of
Surveys Division Chief Ernesto Erive. It also shows on its face that the survey of the
property was endorsed by the Community Environment and Natural Resources Of ce
of the DENR. 3 8 This, compounded by the accompanying technical description of Lot
Nos. 4 and 5 duly executed and veri ed also by Roxas, 3 9 should substantially supply as
it did the means by which the identity of Lot Nos. 4 and 5 may be ascertained. DEICaA
Verily, no error can be attributed to the Court of Appeals when it ruled that
respondents were able to approximate compliance with Section 17 of P.D. No. 1529.
Also telling is the observation made by the Court of Appeals that there was no
objection raised by the oppositor or by the LRA to the admission of the blueprint of
Plan Ccs-007601-000040-D despite the fact that they were well-informed of the
present proceedings, to wit:
In the instant case, the plaintiffs-appellants do not deny that only the blueprint
copy of the plan of the subject lands (Exh. "J") and not the original tracing cloth
plan thereof was submitted to the court a quo since they had previously
submitted the original tracing cloth plan to the Land Registration Authority.
However, despite the failure of the plaintiffs-appellants to present the original
tracing cloth plan, neither the Land Registration Authority nor the oppositor-
appellee question[ed] this de ciency. Likewise, when the blueprint copy of the
plan (Exh. "J") was offered in evidence, the oppositor-appellee did not raise any
objection thereto. Such silence on the part of the Land Registration [Authority] and
the oppositor-appellee can be deemed as an implied admission that the original
tracing cloth plan and the blueprint copy thereof (Exh. "J") are one and the same,
free from all defects and clearly identify the lands sought to be registered. In this
regard . . ., the blueprint copy of the plan (Exh. "J"), together with its technical
descriptions (Exhs. "K" and "L"), is deemed tantamount to substantial compliance
with the requirements of law. 4 0
We now proceed to the issue of possession. Petitioner theorizes that not only
were respondents unable to identify the lots applied for registration; it also claims that
they have no credible evidence tending to establish that for at least 30 years they and
their predecessors-in-interest have occupied and possessed the property openly,
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continuously, exclusively and notoriously under a bona de claim of ownership since
June 12, 1945 or earlier. 4 1 We do not agree.
In an original registration of title under Section 14 (1) 4 2 P.D. No. 1529, the
applicant for registration must be able to establish by evidence that he and his
predecessor-in-interest have exercised acts of dominion over the lot under a bona de
claim of ownership since June 12, 1945 or earlier. 4 3 He must prove that for at least 30
years, he and his predecessor have been in open, continuous, exclusive and notorious
possession and occupation of the land. Republic v. Alconaba 4 4 well explains
possession and occupation of this character, thus:
The law speaks of possession and occupation. Since these words are separated
by the conjunction and, the clear intention of the law is not to make one
synonymous with the other. Possession is broader than occupation because it
includes constructive possession. When, therefore, the law adds the word
occupation, it seeks to delimit the all-encompassing effect of constructive
possession. Taken together with the words open, continuous, exclusive
and notorious, the word occupation serves to highlight the fact that for
an applicant to qualify, his possession must not be a mere ction.
Actual possession of a land consists in the manifestation of acts of
dominion over it of such a nature as a party would naturally exercise
over his own property . 4 5
Certainly, respondents could have produced more proof of this kind had it not
been for the fact that, as certi ed by the Of ce of the Rizal Provincial Assessor, the
relevant portions of the tax records on le with it had been burned when the assessor's
of ce was razed by re in 1997. 5 1 Of equal relevance is the fact that with these tax
assessments, there came next tax payments. Respondents' receipts for tax
expenditures on Lot Nos. 4 and 5 between 1977 and 2001 are likewise eshed out in
the records and in these documents, Sergio, Toribia and Romualdo are the named
owners of the property with Zenaida being identi ed as the one who delivered the
payment in the 1994 receipts. 5 2
The foregoing evidentiary matters and muniments clearly show that Zenaida's
testimony in this respect is no less believable. And the unbroken chain of positive acts
exercised by respondents' predecessors, as demonstrated by these pieces of evidence,
yields no other conclusion than that as early as 1937, they had already demonstrated an
unmistakable claim to the property. Not only do they show that they had excluded all
others in their claim but also, that such claim is in all good faith.
Land registration proceedings are governed by the rule that while tax
declarations and realty tax payment are not conclusive evidence of ownership,
nevertheless, they are a good indication of possession in the concept of owner. These
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documents constitute at least proof that the holder has a claim of title over the
property, for no one in his right mind would be paying taxes for a property that is not in
his actual or at least constructive possession. The voluntary declaration of a piece of
property for taxation purposes manifests not only one's sincere and honest desire to
obtain title to the property. It also announces his adverse claim against the state and all
other parties who may be in con ict with his interest. More importantly, it signi es an
unfeigned intention to contribute to government revenues — an act that strengthens
one's bona fide claim of acquisition of ownership. 5 3
Indeed, that respondents herein have been in possession of the land in the
concept of owner — open, continuous, peaceful and without interference and
opposition from the government or from any private individual — itself makes their right
thereto unquestionably settled and, hence, deserving of protection under the law.
WHEREFORE , the petition is DENIED . The March 30, 2006 Decision and the November 20,
2006 Resolution of the Court of Appeals, in CA-G.R. CV No. 80500, are AFFIRMED .
SO ORDERED .
Carpio, Leonardo-de Castro, * Abad and Mendoza, JJ., concur.
Footnotes
47. Exhibit "O-1," id. at 479 (the back page of the 1937 Tax Declaration).
48. Exhibits "O-2" and "O-3," id. at 480-481.
49. Exhibits "O-4" and "O-5," id. at 482-483.
50. Exhibits "O-6" and "O-7," id. at 484-485.
51. Exhibit "P," id. at 486.